Author Love: An Interview with Farah Oomerbhoy

This week I’m very pleased to welcome Farah Oomerbhoy to the blog. Farah is celebrating the publication of the second book in The Avalonia Chronicles series. The Rise of the Dawnstar is out today. I chatted with her about family, inspiration, and writing heroic female characters.

1. Avalonia was inspired by a tapestry that hung on your grandmother’s wall, and themes of family and belonging run through your books. How has your own experience with family shaped your stories?

That’s a very good question. I didn’t think anyone has ever asked me that before. 🙂

All authors draw from life experiences to form the basis of a story. But after a character starts coming to life everything changes. My books are no different; influences from my childhood and family life do tend to find their way into my work. But eventually, the characters and the story find their own path.

As a child, I had an almost perfect life, until the day my parents divorced and my father married again. I was seven years old.

I had always lived in a big joint family, with my parents, brother, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. But when my father left I started to realize that life was not always fair.

In a way, Aurora’s life at the very beginning mirrors that feeling of having a charmed life, until the day you realize that nothing will ever be the same again.

When I first imagined Aurora, I started to question what life would be like without the support of a close-knit family unit. How would a person cope, what would they become, would they be strong enough to survive on their own.

Writing Aurora’s story is a way of exploring these questions.

Her journey is not only one of external discovery but an internal struggle to find a sense of belonging, of self-worth. To find the happiness that was wrenched away from her at a very young age. The family that she is reunited with through the book, Aunt Serena, Uncle Gabriel, Erien, her grandmother, etc. are all parts of her once perfect life that she is trying to piece together again.

Aurora learns through trials and mistakes that life is not always fair, but you don’t have to do it on your own. Even a hero can ask for help sometimes. No one is perfect and if you have family and people who care about you, it gives you a strength that you never thought was possible.

All her life she thought she was alone, that no one really cared about her until she comes to Avalonia and realizes the importance of family and duty and finds a sense of belonging she never had before.

2. You wrote in an interview once that you loved fantasy stories, such as The Lord of the Rings, as a child, but would be frustrated that the girls never got to do anything. How did you balance writing a strong, heroic female character like Aurora with maintaining her femininity?

It was hard at first achieving this balance. I wanted my main character to be one whom young teenage girls could relate to. But at the same time I wanted her to be strong-willed, capable, and someone whom they could look up to as well.

Even though Aurora may have magical powers and trains to be a warrior; her likes and dislikes, her naiveté at times and even her infatuation with Rafe, reminds us that she is still, in essence, an ordinary sixteen-year-old girl. She ends up making mistakes and gets into trouble just like a regular teenage girl would. She didn’t grow up as a warrior so her feminine side is quite ingrained in her character.

I wanted readers to see that to be a hero and a warrior, a girl doesn’t have to dress up as a man or give up who she really is inside. She is perfectly capable of being feminine and a hero at the same time.

3. The Rise of the Dawnstar is the second book in your Avalonia Chronicles. When you wrote The Last of the Firedrakes, did you know it would be the first book in a series or was it originally just a stand-alone story you were burning to tell?

When I first imagined Avalonia I did not think I could even write one book, let alone a whole series, but I decided to give it a try.

At first, it was just a standalone book, called Aurora Firedrake. Until I realized that Aurora’s story would take a while to tell. So once I was halfway through The Last of the Firedrakes, I decided this would be a trilogy, and I named it The Avalonia Chronicles.

4. How are you like Aurora? How are you not at all like her?

Aurora could be a sixteen-year-old version of myself, but at the same time, she is not me.

One of the main concepts of the story is that Aurora could be anyone; that at any point in time it could be you who could open a cupboard, enter a library, or step into a tapestry and be transported to a magical world.

Aurora is an ordinary girl trying to make sense of an extraordinary life. She’s the girl next door, someone you wouldn’t believe could ever be a princess or a warrior.

Everyone has within them the potential for greatness, but it is the choices we make and the standards we live by that shape our character and help us grow into our true abilities.

That is what makes an ordinary person a queen.

5. Can you tell us a bit about what you’re working on next?

Book 3 😉

The Rise of the Dawnstar,
book two of The Avalonia Chronicles.

Aurora Firedrake returns in the spellbinding sequel to The Last of the Firedrakes.

The seven kingdoms of Avalonia are crumbling and evil is spreading across the land like a plague. Queen Morgana is close to finding a way to open The Book of Abraxas and it’s only a matter of time until she uses the power trapped inside its pages to enslave the entire world.

The seven kingdoms of Avalonia are crumbling and evil is spreading across the land like a plague. Queen Morgana is close to finding a way to open The Book of Abraxas and it’s only a matter of time until she uses the power trapped inside its pages to enslave the entire world.

With Avalonia growing more dangerous by the day, Aurora must travel through war-torn lands and deep into the heart of the fae kingdom of Elfi. Her goal is to find a legendary weapon infused with the last of the realm’s ancient magic—the only weapon in the world powerful enough to stop the queen.

Aurora might have survived her first battle against Morgana, but the true fight to save her kingdom and restore her throne has only just begun…

Available On

About the Author

Farah Oomerbhoy is the international bestselling author of The Avalonia Chronicles. Her first book, The Last of the Firedrakes, was originally published on Wattpad where it gained over two million reads and a Watty Award. Since publication, her debut has gone on to win a silver medal in IBPA’s Benjamin Franklin Awards and the Readers’ Favorite Book Awards, along with winning a finalist placement in the USA Best Book Awards. Farah loves the fantastical and magical and often dreams of living in Narnia, Neverland, or the Enchanted Forest. With a master’s degree in English literature from the University of Mumbai, Farah spends her creative time crafting magical worlds for young adults. She lives with her family in Mumbai, India.

Giveaway!

For each stop on tour, there will be a special number at the end of the post. Collect all the numbers, add them up, and enter to win one of three prizes! Once you have all the numbers you can enter the giveaway here: http://farahoomerbhoy.com/rise-dawnstar-now/

My number is 9.

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About Lisa Manterfield

Lisa Manterfield is the creator of LifeWithoutBaby.com, the online community that gives a voice to women without children. Her writing has been featured in a broad range of publications, including The Huffington Post, Los Angeles Times, and Psychology Today. She has also taken her work to the stage at venues such as Spark Off Rose and Expressing Motherhood. Lisa is the author of the award-winning memoir I’m Taking My Eggs and Going Home: How One Woman Dared to Say No to Motherhood and the novel A Strange Companion. She lives in Southern California with her wonderful husband (“Mr. Fab”) and overindulged cat.